maxbraketorque
Very Senior Member
A great deal on an RT-AC3100 came up last week, so I grabbed one. Since tons of people are having issues with the radios apparently burning up, I purchased a laptop cooler (Cooler Master CM NotePal X-Lite II (R9-NBC-XL2K-GP, $22 shipped on Amazon Prime). I like the Cooler Master coolers because unlike many of the other brands out there, this laptop cooler blows air up out the top and towards the laptop (or router in this case). Its a great looking cooler and is the perfect physical size for the RT-AC3100. The airflow rate is not as high as I expected compared to a large one I'm using for an HP laptop that cooks itself without it, but radio temperatures are around 50C, and CPU temperature is around 62C, so the fan seems to be working well.
My setup is pretty basic. I have all the AI stuff, QOS, and Smart Connect disabled. I have some port forwarding rules set up, and I tweaked the wifi band advanced settings a bit, but that's it.
I spent the better part of the weekend tinkering with speed tests and Smart Connect. I tried hard to make Smart Connect work, but ultimately, I gave up. Speed test comparisons were no problem, and for that, the RT-AC3100 (A6) soundly beat my RT-AC68U (B1) both in near field and far field tests with my 2016 Macbook Pro (N/AC 3x3). AC link rates and measured up/down speeds both near (within 15 ft AC) and far (50+ feet N, 2.4 GHz) from the router were double or nearly double. I found that if I gave the 5 GHz band its own SSID and gave it preference over the 2.4 GHz band in my MBP wireless settings, my MBP would stay connected to AC in the long range tests, and in those cases, speeds were quadruple compared to what my RT-AC68U would do in those locations on N, 2.4 GHz. This is quite different than what I expected would happen based on the router ranker tests. I was guessing a slight benefit or null benefit for the RT-AC3100.
Overall networking responsiveness feels improved with the RT-AC3100 as well even in areas of the house with strong signal strength.
Bottomline is that as long as the router OS remains stable and doesn't cook a radio, I'll be quite happy with it.
My setup is pretty basic. I have all the AI stuff, QOS, and Smart Connect disabled. I have some port forwarding rules set up, and I tweaked the wifi band advanced settings a bit, but that's it.
I spent the better part of the weekend tinkering with speed tests and Smart Connect. I tried hard to make Smart Connect work, but ultimately, I gave up. Speed test comparisons were no problem, and for that, the RT-AC3100 (A6) soundly beat my RT-AC68U (B1) both in near field and far field tests with my 2016 Macbook Pro (N/AC 3x3). AC link rates and measured up/down speeds both near (within 15 ft AC) and far (50+ feet N, 2.4 GHz) from the router were double or nearly double. I found that if I gave the 5 GHz band its own SSID and gave it preference over the 2.4 GHz band in my MBP wireless settings, my MBP would stay connected to AC in the long range tests, and in those cases, speeds were quadruple compared to what my RT-AC68U would do in those locations on N, 2.4 GHz. This is quite different than what I expected would happen based on the router ranker tests. I was guessing a slight benefit or null benefit for the RT-AC3100.
Overall networking responsiveness feels improved with the RT-AC3100 as well even in areas of the house with strong signal strength.
Bottomline is that as long as the router OS remains stable and doesn't cook a radio, I'll be quite happy with it.